The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, August 13, 1914, Image 3

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■ Illi f■ t tF•W i; » t .a, B ir « 818 3Bit rfgmt r L = ?°% ! i 2 Daughters!) hs ’., H . A woman s organism is a very delicate thing—it very easily f® ; B gets out of order—just like a delicate piece of machinery, it J ■ requires more than ordinary care and attention. I* j p lhere are many signs which pointtodisorder, such nslieadaches, unaccount- j * 1 B ab>e pains in various parts of the body, listlessness, nervousness,irritableness, g■ ; dizziness, faintness, backache, loss of appetite, depression, and many others. i » Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription «j fe E has been the means of restoring thousands of suffering women to natural health b 1 F ■ and strength. For more than forty years it has been successfully carrying on |bH |• f this great work. Today it is known throughout the length and breadth of every ft®B t. ■ la nd - Women everywhere look upon it as a helpful friend. Let it aid you. k« ■ ; ■ 1 "* t-1? - • Sold in liauid or tablet form by druppists, cr trial box mailed St fi ’ you for 50 cents from Dr. Pierce’s Dispcrtsary, Buffalo, N.Y, | B J |Bp Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate Stomach, Liver and Eowels Fcl i ■ Sit.ii » ■ ... I B 3 ■ D ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ e EBB It KB SESE W2BBBKBKBBI B « 1 E. . fS , _ j Gasoline Engines, Wood Turning Outfits, Pump Jacks, Saw Mills, Shingle Mills, Power Cane Mills, Black and Galvanized Pipe, Brass Goods, and Fittings. Gainesville Inin Works. Member Chamber of Commerce, GAINESVILLE. GA. 'GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY, Atlanta, s A r a- .-A Ji The South’s great £ Technical and S Bn*” School | M ?a. Tech I tw F lumty for the young | I KM „ l 4 ;H vld a * men of Georgia and the |, * South. £ I F? e I "* Offers full four-yesr courses in | I \ Mechanical, Texfile, Chemical, Civil | 1 asd Electrical Engineering, ! | *' w and Architecture. 5 g The graduates of ‘'Georgia Tech” are in great demand, owing to the | | sp.en.did training offered at this institution. Courses of study practical f 3 and thorough. For Catalog address, I * K. G. President, i S « . i k Fifteen Free Scholarships For Each County in Georgia. Neri i miiißii i i ■bb———b— ■—Be—— One way of BBSS S"'— KxSWNGMONEY IBS Don’t Waste It. Cut out cheap roofing NEponseT Paroid Roofing will save you money be cause it lasts longer and we can prove it. Also all lengths in Galvanized Roofing. PRUITT-BARRETT HDW. CO. • " I ' '-.J -f VU i fl Ilßt lUhshh?/ * la fca FIWMiIMSI 13 PIETS SHINGLES I Are Stormproof* They interlock ana overlap in such a wav that the hardest driv ■ mg rain or sifting snow cannot possibly get under them, g besides this they last indefinitely, and never need repairs. 4 3 Another point-They’re very reasonable in first cost. You can B learn all about, them from A. H. (VSHIELUS, Gainesville, Ga. Z—vwfc.* rr. <«WMhMrtYMWr • ~ »r, . -hh -?■»- TB~*irm TIL. I K TT? 7 GAI! SVILI POWER CO OWNED?: LOC ELY Furnish Street Car S i. ice, Eh ctric Lights and Power ■ -meed Rt .&? on C. t i > Purchase ? f Street Car Tickets, sentile and .‘Tice* Futinched at Office CAimo t' falsehood and VilUriCHi iOit IS CALMLY ANSWERED Senator Hoke Smith is a candidate to succeed himself on his own record and without reference to the merits or demerits of any one else. He has not based his candidacy on the issues or prejudices of former campaigns, but has expressed the hope that the estrangements of the past have been forgotten by others as they have been by him. His anncuncmenc was in a spirit of t good will and harmony and he expressed a desire and a purpose to represent all the people without regard to the differences of previous years. Remaining steadfastly at his post and working incessantly to serve the in terests of his constituents, leading in the fight to break up the unfair methods of the New York Cotton Exchange; the first of all the people’s representa tives to take steps to protect the cotton planters of the South against the disastrous effects of the European war, he is nevertheless the object of the grossest misrepresentation, vilification, slander and abuse. It is charged, and the charge is- reiterated and whispered in ears that may never hear the denial, that Hoke Smith sat silent and let a negro be con firmed as judge in Washington city. The statement is utterly and outrage ously false, as shown by the Congressional Record of Monday, July 13, 1914, page 13084. This charge against the man whose campaign for Governor put the disfranchisement law on the statute books of Georgia ought to answer itself, but the Congressional Record of July 13 presents the unimpeachable evidence and it can be read by all who care to know the truth. Hoke Smith fought the confirmation for over two months and voted against it. The Record shews that he did. * With shameless perversion of the facts, it is charged that he has protected negroes in office, when it was he who went to the White House and so protested against the nomination of a negro as Register of the Treasury that the nomination was withdrawn and a negro no longer signs the and bonds of the Government. His protests induced the President to remove Lincoln Johnson, the negro Recorder of Deeds, and yet Hoke Smith has been abused and villified for not attending a public speaking to “waste the night in words” when, in fact, he was actually, at the time, in communication with the President to prevent the continuance of the negro in office for even a few days. Mr. John H. Adriaans, President of the Fairplay Association, which had charge of the meeting, says, in a letter to Senator Smith: “On the very night of our meeting an effort was made to keep the negro temporarily in the office of recorder of deeds because of the illness of the deputy recorder. You blocked this effort, and since that time, due to your efforts, a white man has had charge of the office of recorder of deeds. ‘I have since understood that the President will permit the present white deputy to continue in control of this office during the remainder of the pres ident’s term. It thus appears that one ounce of practical work you did on June 30, 1914, exceeded in value the pound of theoretical work we did during the three hours of our meeting.” . It is charged that Senator Smith is an enemy of the Parcel Post, when ,Postmaster General Burleson says, in a letter to Mr. Joseph P. Rockmore, of Loganville: “1 am profoundly astonished that any one should charge that Senator Hoke Smith is opposed to the parcel post. The exigencies of the situation must be desperate indeed when such gross perversion of the truth is resorted to. “Instead of being the enemy of the parcel post, Senator Hoke Smith has been, and is, one of its most intelligent friends and supporters; in fact, the people are indebted to Senator Smith for material assistance in em bodying in the parcel post law the vitalizing provisions which will enable the postmaster general to ultimately make this splendid service so helpful and beneficial to the great producing classes of our country. Indeed, they owe him a debt of gratitude for what he has done for parcel post.” It is charged that the great Democratic Currency law which he helped to perfect and pass and which has freed the country from the domination of the Money Trust, is a “nullity” and that the prevision for five year loans on farm lands by National banks is a delusion. Yet Dr. Stockbridge, editor of the Southern Ruralist, has found, by writing to the banks, that the National banks are ready and willing to lend money on farm lands, which they were prohibited from doing until the Currency bill was passed, and that some of the banks are already making such loans. It is charged that Senator Smith is in favor of foreign immigration, when, in fact, he voted to restrict immigration, and, when President Taft vetoed the 'bill, voted to pass it over his veto, and the Senate did pass the bill over the veto, but it did not receive the necessary two-thirds vote in the House. Senator Smith will support and vote for the bill when it comes up again. Senator Smith has been in the Senate less than three years. During that time he has rendered a service as follows: 1. He has obtained for Georgia one of the twelve great Regional Reserve banks, to supply money for commercial and agricultural purposes. 2. He introduced and passed a bill appropriating five million dollars an nually for Farm Demonstration work. 3. He was largely instrumental in perfecting and passing the Parcel Post law. 4. He established the Division of Markets in the Department of Agriculture. 5. He fought the Pension bill and helped to save the people $50,000,000 a year. 6. He voted for the bill restricting foreign immigration and helped to pass it over Taft’s veto, though it failed in the House. 7. He urged an amendment to the Arbitration Treaties, which was adopted, protecting the Southern States against suits over fraudulent bonds. 8. He is opposed to and has fought all appointments of negroes to office. 9. He proposed important amendments to the Currency bill, which were adopted. 10. He is pushing a bill for Government aid to country roads. 11. He is pushing the bill to break up gambling in cotton futures, by which the farmers of the South are robbed of $70,000,000 every yeac. 12. He is at work on the bill for Rural Credits and such a bill will un doubtedly be passed. Senator Smith has had incorporated in the anti-trust bills a section which exempts from prosecution such organizations as the Farmers’ Union, organ ized for purposes of mutual help, so that they will not be violating the anti trust laws when they seek to get better prices for their crops. Hon. R. F. Duckworth, former president of the Farmers’ Union of Georgia, and one of its most prominent members, after naming a long list of things in which Senator Smith has helped the farmers, says, In a letter to Mr. James Cowart, chairman of the Executive Committee, Georgia Farmers’ Union, Mill wood, Ga.: “The above is legislation the Farmers’ Union has advocated, and the stand taken by Senator Smith. “The Farmers’ Union, as an organization, is opposed, as you know, to advo cating any man for political office. But I feel no hesitancy in stating that Senator Smith has stood with us on every measure that we have advocated, and if it is being circulated that a single state official is opposed to his re-election, then I am not aware of that fact.” In this very hour, when malignant enemies and hired falsifiers are slandering i him and misrepresenting the work that he has done, he is bending every energy of mind and body to protect the South from the disaster that is threat- ! ened by the war that has involved all Europe, and it is for those whom he i r ‘ seeking to serve and who appreciate his labors to see that he is not cut do T I in his usefulness by men who hate him more than they love their State. H. Y. McCORD, Manager Hoke Smith Campaign CommitU ; Atlanta, Ga., August 8, 1914. I Gainesville Midland Railway Schedule Time. Table No. 16, Aug. 2, 1914. b— »i bob * -in ir--j.ru—lf 11 ir > LEAVE GAINESVILLE I No. I-daily ... ... y.lsa.ini o —i!ail\ __ ... 4.15 p. in I No 11 Daiiy except Sunday 2.20 p. m . ARRIVE GAINESVILLE No. 2—Daily 9.10 a. m No. -I—Daily 4.10 p. m No. 12—daily except Sunday .. ... 12.00 m rESOBK* 21?.' /TSOnssiZSVSWJi? ■ 7; f & t,.r E | lEiectnci = Bitters ■ | Succeed when everything else fails ' > in nervous prostration and female g ? weaknesses they arc the supreme ’’ 5 remedy, a: ‘housands have testified ;i r OR KiDNEY, LIVER > i STOMACH TROUBLE | it is the best medicine ever sold | | over a druggist’s c «.r-er. | in CHICHESTER S PILLS THE PIAMOXD BRANT!. a Liuile*! Auk your 8.-uggist for 1 -n-oro Jirand/A\ i illi in Rea ano t, o Jd metaliicWv boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/ Juke no other. Buy r.f vour v iirugglut. A' k forClfi-t [fts.TEß'f BxAK'.JMD URA.\si> PILLS, for 81. years Known as Best, Safest. Alv.-s vs Rchtibit LUC DRiuGfSIS 7 Room Home For Sale. The Jno. Stringer place on Oak St Good 7 room home, large lot, good barn, well fixed up. For sale at t bargain, on easy terms. For partic ulars address WOODRUFF MA CHINERY MFG. CO. Winder. Ga. ■ / y / . //s'* / / j y Infection and Insect Bites Dangerous. Mosquit. t-. flies and otiierin- ><o-. I which br< e.l quickly in ga: »?."e I pails, ponds of stagnant water, barns, musty places, etc., are car riers of disease. Every time they ' bite you. they inject poison into , your system from which some dread l disease may result. Get a bottle of E Sloan's Liniment. It is antiseptic t and a few drops will neutralize the infection caused by the insect bites . or rusty nails. Sloan's Liniment . di-infects Cuts. Bruises and Sores. ; You cannot afford to be without it i in your home. Money back if not satisfied. Only 25c. at your Druggist. r Regretted Losing Good Thing. ! Ella —“Mrs. Gayboy looks very sad ’ since she divorced her husband.” ~ Bella —“Yes, she didn’t know what a ’ . good husband she had until she saw ( how generous he behaved about the i alimony.”—Club-Fellow. > S ummer Constipation Danefer- ’ ous. Constipation in Summer-time is more dangerous than in the fall, ’ winter or spring. The food you eat is often contaminated and is more ; i likely to ferment in your stomach. ■ i Then you are apt to drink much 1 i cold water during the hot weather. j thus injuring your stomach. Colic, ’ Fever, Ptomaine Poisoning and other ills are natural results. Po- Do-Lax will keep you well, as it in- > I creases the Bile, the natural laxa ’ : five, which rids the bowels of the , congested poisonous waste. Po-Do- Lax will make you feel better. Take ( a dose to-night. 50c. at your Drug gist’s. ■ No Cause to Worry. “Theosophilus,’ said Mrs. Gossip, > “just think: One-half the world doesn’t . know how the other half lives’” “Nev ■l er mind, dear,” replied her long-suffer ‘ ing husband, “that isn’t your fault.” I How To Give Quinine To Children. FEBRILINE is the trade-mark name given to an *! improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleas ; I ant to take and does not disturb the stomach. : Children take it and never know it is Quinine. ; Also especially adapted to adults who cannot ! i take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor I ! S £l: . se nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try I t the next time you need Quinine tor any pur ; I rose. Ask for 2-ounc<. •original package. The ; ! Liame FEBKIL.INE is blown in bottle. 25 cents. ; A WOMAN’S BACK ; 1 The Advice of This Gainesville Woman is of Certain Value. Many a woman’s back has many . aches and pains. Ofttimes ’tis the kidneys’ fault. That’s why Doan’s Kidney Pills are so effective. i Many Gainesville women know this. 1 Read what one has to say about it. , Mrs. J. Spain, 38 Oak St., Gaines ville, says: “Some years ago I gave i Doan’s Kidney Pills my endorse- 1 ment in return for the good results they brought one of the family. All T then said still holds good. I had a severe sickness and after I was able to get about my back began to hurt me. I was nervous and languid and my kidneys didn’t act as they should. I used one box of Doan’s { Kidney Pills, and they strengthened my back and relieved the other symptoms of kidney disease.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Spain had. Foster-Mil burn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. C. A. DOZIER t ■ Real Estate i And insurance I No. 1 State Bank Bldg Will be glad to sell to you, or forvou, and will insure your 'property in the very best I i Companies at the lowest rates i possible. ( COME TO SEE ME Week-End Rates. , Round trip week-end rates from J Gainesville, to all Gainesville Mid ! land Railway Stations. Two trains ■ daily, tickets sold every Saturday and Sunday, limited to following 'Monday. Two connections daily via Monroe for Augusta, Ga.. and va rious points. Connections at Athens with Seaboard, Central and Georgia IL R. R. L. Mobley, T. P. A.. VV. B. Veazey. Traffic Manager. Gaines ville, Ga. land for Sale. If you are looking tor a home, come to Bishop. Ga. See Fam bro ugh-Porter, Co., they can fit yon up with just what you want in town lots or Farms, etc. Fambrough-Porter Co. ol::st of all schoolbooks Nip": r Tablet* at University of Penn ey. vani*. 'JacAubtcdly Have That Claim to Distinction. Professor Langdon of Oxford, England, who is spending some time at the University of Pennsylvania, has discovered that one group of the famous Xippur tablets stored at the university are in reality the oldest schoolbooks known to exist. They show that the children of the an cients learned much that the boys and girls of today have to study. Ac cording to these tablets the children of 5,200 years ago were taught arith metic, geography, history and gram mar just like the children of today. The multiplication tables are re markably distinct, and in plain nu merals show the incontrovertible fact that three times one are three and five times one are five. On one tablet the schoolboy has been given a lesson in phonetic signs corre sponding to the shorthand of mod ern times. The Summerians, the authors of these tablets at the Penn sylvania university, also invented the use of writing syllables and com bining them into words, being the first step toward the alphabet.—The Christian Herald. WHY HE WANTED TO KNOW Theatergoer Had Reasons for Inquir ing as to the Length of Scene That Was Coming. When “Monte Cristo” was first produced at the Adelpha theater, London, many years ago, it did not appear in the abbreviated form that playgoers have since become used to. It is said that, as originally shown, it took three nights to give. Natu rally, pruning and condensing were very much in order. But even at that, on occasion of which reference is about to be made, the perform ance was scarcely half over as the bells tolled the hour of midnight. ■ The late George Belmore was playing Caderousse and the audience was in a supersomnolent state when he came in and said: i <r Listen! I have a tale to unfold.” A bright young chap sitting in front was awakened by the exclama tion. Quickly he got to his feet and in a most plaintive voice said: 1 “Will it be long, sir? For if I miss the last ’bus to Putney I’ll have to stay all night or walk home, sir.” LOOKING AHEAD. i Francis B. Sayre condemned di vorce in a New York interview. , “We should select our wives with prudence,” said Mr. Sayre, “having I a proper regard for the the perma nent character of marriage. W® should look far ahead. We should foresee.” He laughed, and added: “Yes, look ahead, foresee—that’s the idea—like the private in the shoeless regiment. “During the Civil war, you know, there was a regiment called the shoe less because its men had no foot gear. “In this regiment it was customary for every man, after taking careful aim at an enemy, to shout before he fired: “ “Them’s my shoes? ” RAPID WORKER. “My friend Chamberton turns out four novels a year.” “A literary celebrity, eh?” “Say, rather, a literary celerity.” THE OLD LADY AGAIN. Mrs. Kawler —Is it true that your cousin, Mr. Perkins, is married? Mrs. Blun derby —Yes. Robert has joined the benedictines. TURNED DOWN. Playwright—Then you think my play would take too long. Manager—On the contrary, I’m afraid it wouldn’t take at all. APT DESCRIPTION. An affinity is generally a woman with blonde hair who has more of the home-breaking instinct than a burglar. BOUND TO MAKE ENEMIES. Marriage is indeed a serious prob lem to the girl who has sixteen dear friends from whom to select eight bridesmaids. PESSIMISM TRIUMPHS. When failure comes along and ud~ sets our plans it isn’t every man who can save a few chunks of hope far the future,